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Vista Estate Sale Huge - Really fine Modern - Everything !!! (Vista)

Vista Estate Sale Huge - Really fine Modern   - Everything !!! 1 thumbnailVista Estate Sale Huge - Really fine Modern   - Everything !!! 2 thumbnailVista Estate Sale Huge - Really fine Modern   - Everything !!! 3 thumbnailVista Estate Sale Huge - Really fine Modern   - Everything !!! 4 thumbnailVista Estate Sale Huge - Really fine Modern   - Everything !!! 5 thumbnailVista Estate Sale Huge - Really fine Modern   - Everything !!! 6 thumbnailVista Estate Sale Huge - Really fine Modern   - Everything !!! 7 thumbnailVista Estate Sale Huge - Really fine Modern   - Everything !!! 8 thumbnailVista Estate Sale Huge - Really fine Modern   - Everything !!! 9 thumbnailVista Estate Sale Huge - Really fine Modern   - Everything !!! 10 thumbnailVista Estate Sale Huge - Really fine Modern   - Everything !!! 11 thumbnailVista Estate Sale Huge - Really fine Modern   - Everything !!! 12 thumbnailVista Estate Sale Huge - Really fine Modern   - Everything !!! 13 thumbnailVista Estate Sale Huge - Really fine Modern   - Everything !!! 14 thumbnailVista Estate Sale Huge - Really fine Modern   - Everything !!! 15 thumbnailVista Estate Sale Huge - Really fine Modern   - Everything !!! 16 thumbnailVista Estate Sale Huge - Really fine Modern   - Everything !!! 17 thumbnailVista Estate Sale Huge - Really fine Modern   - Everything !!! 18 thumbnailVista Estate Sale Huge - Really fine Modern   - Everything !!! 19 thumbnailVista Estate Sale Huge - Really fine Modern   - Everything !!! 20 thumbnailVista Estate Sale Huge - Really fine Modern   - Everything !!! 21 thumbnailVista Estate Sale Huge - Really fine Modern   - Everything !!! 22 thumbnailVista Estate Sale Huge - Really fine Modern   - Everything !!! 23 thumbnailVista Estate Sale Huge - Really fine Modern   - Everything !!! 24 thumbnail
Elevado Hills Drive
start time: 9-2pm


We have the contents of a whole huge Fabulous House to sell -
Friday 9-2
Saturday 8-2
Sunday 9-2

Contents include
Womens Clothes
Costume jewelry
Womens shoes and handbags -

A full baby nursery

Loads of housewares, Art, Patio Furniture
Everything
Golf Tennis
Here is a partial list of what we have!

We post the full address Friday at 6am

Pan QiQun Qiqun Pan (or Pan Qi-Qun) is a Chinese-born, Los Angeles-based abstract artist known for blending Eastern spiritual concepts with Western abstract expressionism, often using mixed media to explore texture, color, and natural rhythms. His art emphasizes the whole of nature and the universe, with indistinct forms conveying universal chaos and change, according to CAFA ART INFO.
Key Aspects of his Work:
Fusion of East and West:
Pan's art combines traditional Chinese aesthetic values with modern Western abstract styles.
Influence of Abstract Expressionism:
He demonstrates a deep understanding of Western abstract expressionism, particularly the Big Field, Hard Edge, and experimental movements popular in the late 1950s and early 1960s.
Focus on Nature:
Influenced by the concept of the "whole" in traditional Chinese culture, nature deeply affects his art, with his paintings reflecting the rhythms and changes of the universe.
Mixed Media and Materiality:
Pan is interested in material, exploring the separation, fusion, and transparency of colors by using mixed media, including acrylics, to pursue new textural effects.
Abstract Style:
His works are non-representational, characterized by complex color patterns, collage, and an expression of abstract concepts.
Background:
Birth: Born in Changzhou, Jiangsu Province, China, in 1952.
Education: Studied art in the United States at the Otis Institute of Art and Design and West Los Angeles College.
Career: Has lived and worked in Los Angeles for decades, becoming a prominent figure in the contemporary abstract art scene.


California Monterey Catalina tile top table
Gary Harper “Enigma Clouds” original Oil 48” X 48”

Barcalounger
Wall relief Craig French
Mies Van Der Rohe DWR Chairs Chairs

Dr Seuss Waterfall”
Theodor Seuss Geisel (aka Dr. Seuss, American, 1904-1991).Edition 510 of 850. Edition number lower left. Printed signature lower right authenticated by Audrey Geisl, widow of Theodor Seuss Geisl. A limited edition, hand-pulled serigraph on archival canvas adapted from Theodor Geisel's (aka Dr. Seuss) original 1955 oil painting titled A special piece from a limited, sold-out edition, mounted in a fabulous wooden frame finished in black and silver hues and boasting a lively undulating form that complements the sinuous motifs in Seuss's composition perfectly! Size (artwork): 24" L x 30" W (61 cm x 76.2 cm) Size (frame): 31.4" L x 37.5" W (79.8 cm x 95.2 cm)

About the one and only Dr. Seuss: "Theodor Seuss Geisel, better known to the world as the beloved Dr. Seuss, was born in 1904 on Howard Street in Springfield, Massachusetts. Ted's father, Theodor Robert, and grandfather were brewmasters in the city. His mother, Henrietta Seuss Geisel, often soothed her children to sleep by 'chanting' rhymes remembered from her youth. Ted credited his mother with both his ability and desire to create the rhymes for which he became so well known.

Although the Geisels enjoyed great financial success for many years, the onset of World War I and Prohibition presented both financial and social challenges for the German immigrants. Nonetheless, the family perservered and again prospered, providing Ted and his sister, Marnie, with happy childhoods.

Ted left Springfield as a teenager to attend Dartmouth College, where he became editor-in-chief of the Jack-O-Lantern, Dartmouth's humor magazine. Although his tenure as editor ended prematurely when Ted and his friends were caught throwing a drinking party, which was against the prohibition laws and school policy, he continued to contribute to the magazine, signing his work 'Seuss.' This is the first record of the 'Seuss' pseudonym, which was both Ted's middle name and his mother's maiden name.

To please his father, who wanted him to be a college professor, Ted went on to Oxford University in England after graduation. However, his academic studies bored him, and he decided to tour Europe instead. Oxford did provide him the opportunity to meet a classmate, Helen Palmer, who not only became his first wife, but also a children's author and book editor.

Ted returned to the States and was contributing to Life, Vanity Fair, Judge, etc., when an editor at Viking Press offered him a contract to illustrate a collection of children's sayings called Boners. While the book received bland reviews, Ted's illustrations were championed; he considered the opportunity his first, official 'big break' in children's literature, and another turning point in his career.

Many honors and awards were bestowed upon Ted, including an honorary Doctorate of Humane Letters from his alma mater, Dartmouth. In addition to six other honorary doctorates, some of Ted's more notable awards include an Oscar for Gerald McBoing-Boing; two Emmys for Halloween is Grinch Night and The Grinch Grinches the Cat in the Gat; a Pulitizer Prize; a Peabody for the animated specials How the Grinch Stole Christmas! and Horton Hears a Who!; and a New York Library Literary Lion. Three of his books received Caldecott Honor Awards. In 1980, the American Library Association honored Ted with a Laura Ingalls Wilder Award. This special award is given to an author or illustrator whose books - having been published in the United States - have made a substantial contribution and lasting impact to children's literature.

Shortly before his death, when Ted was asked if there was anything left unsaid, he pondered the question and finally responded. 'The best slogan I can think of to leave with the U.S.A. would be: 'We can .....and we've got to.....do better than this.'

After devoting 53 years to creating entertaining and instructive books, the good Dr. Seuss taught all that he could teach. Ted Seuss Geisel passed away on September 24, 1991, at the age of 87. As a permanent reminder to the reading public, the final line in Ted's final book (Oh, the Places You'll Go!) issues the following charge: 'You're off to great places! Today is your day! Your mountain is waiting. So...get on your way!'" (Source: Western Oregon University website, Dr. Seuss Art Website, and Dr. Seuss National Memorial Website)




2 Sofas Kravet
ABRISHAMI HESSAN
38/100 “Nude Nights
Love’s Curtain 55/295
Dinh Hanh Artowrk
Thomas Pradzynski if Oil

Dakota Jackson Self Winding Cocktail table The Self-Winding Cocktail Table was designed in 1978 and is now part of the Dakota Jackson Classics Series. A choreographed piece inviting the user to become part of the dance with the moving components of the table. Cylindrical base supporting 3 layers of 3/4” Tempered Glass. Revolving round top. Lower Tempered Glass levels revolve and extend beyond top level. 36” diameter x 17” h; 48” diameter movement.

Gary Harper Clouds 48” x 48” Original Oil painting

22 The Boulevard Magazine | September 2008
Escondido artist Gary Harper reinvented himself in middle age from another
profession to become full-time
commercial artist in the second half
of his life.
Harper is a self-taught artist whose
first half of life was as a corporate
executive, mainly as a director of
marketing and sales. He had been
painting since he was a teen, but only
became a commercial artist after he
decided to change careers.
I went back to look at what made
me successful in my business career
and it came back to my love of art,he recalls. In 1997 at the age of 43 he
reinvented himself.
I determined to go ahead and
pursue art. I did some paintings and
the response was good. I said I am going to do this!'

Eventually he quit what he was doing before to practice art fulltime.
He developed a marketing plan
and pursued the galleries that did
his type of work.
He was accepted and began to
sell his works.
When they say, my type of art,
they mean abstract expressionist, art
that is non-figurative, is an expression
of the artists feelings, emotions
a spontaneous process. Based
mostly on textures and colors. It
could be abstracted landscapes. It
could be taking a memory of a scene
and translating it to color. Its a subjective
interpretation of reality.

One of his biggest customers is
Valley View Casino. Once the refuge
of kitsch and pop culture, today
casinos are sometimes also the
patrons of the fine arts to some of its
most creative modern practitioners
having the same relationship as the
Medicis or the Borgias had to artists
like Leonardo or Michelangelo.
He painted some striking
abstract impressionist pieces that
you will see in some of the new facilities
of Valley View Casino, such as
BLD
Seventy of his paintings hang in
various parts of the casino, in executive
offices and restaurants.
Some are sculptural, like the mandalas
made of metals and resins and
built up in multi-dimensions that
Harper is known for. His paintings
are all textural, taking the term
painting to a new level.

His work began to appear in
the Michael Collins Gallery in
Escondido. He pursued other art
galleries, and was eventually
accepted in some of the best in the
region, including the Denise
Roberge in Palm Desert, the Tracy
Renee Gallery in Escondido, the
Obernier in La Jolla and the
Elizabeth Edwards in Palm Desert
and Laguna.Gary Harper joined Fine Art America on December 26th, 2010.




Leonard Wren - Light of Provence 310/395
Leonard Wren's earliest influence was a decorative one, in the form of automotive pinstriping. His fine art influence came later, in 1968, when he visited various art museums. He was particularly impressed by a show of Impressionist works in New York. He attended Goetz Art School, the Scottsdale Artist School, and the Art Student League. His work has been shown in over 20 solo exhibitions and many group shows in galleries and museums throughout the U.S. and France.

Modern Stools Chrome Black Leather and Teak

Natuzzi Sectional Black Leather


D Table


Kitchen
Salam Teapot Degrenne

Garage
Vintage Fraternity Paddles
each

Lime green ceramic Pottery figures pair

VIntage chargers memorabilia
Heater

Teacups and Saucers
each
Lot of VIntage Hall Autumn Leaf china

Antique Alladin Kerosene Lampmilk glass with the lincoln drape 2
each
BBQ set

Directors Chairs

1970’s Birth Record

WOmans Home Companion 1935

DOWNSTAIRS

Silver table side table - glass top

Tibetan Table Cabinet

Table top pool table


RIVERS JERSEY 17


Cromartie Jersey 3


Upstairs

Standing Lamps

Fabulous modernist Metal side table Mixed metals Memphis Milano inspired Moroccan Made Badia

2 arm swing lamp from Holtkotter Leuchten

Unline Wine refrigerator
Large Capodimonte rose bouquet

Baby Crib

Bookshelf

Eleanor Lane GLorious Sunshine

Decorative art pieces by B Prawford

Asparagus plates
each
Bubble Stem martini Glasses

Pillows decorator
Joan Irving Glass art Side table Modern FIreplace screen Modern FIreplace tools Colonial Blue Fenton Glasses
Calvin Klein Khaki collection
20” x 19”d x 41” tall to the back of the seat - 29” high to the seat LOWENSTEIN STOOLS CHROME TEAK WOOD Lenox Orchard Jam Jars

Last View of Tuscany Philip Craig
Jura Capresso MachineLarge Ceramic Boot vase -
post modern
Post Modern Screen

½ round panel Decorative Tuscan

James Wiens Lavendar Skies

Herrings Fox Hunting Breaking Cover - Print framed

M Castillo Architxture

Florida Highway Artist Print


OFFICE LEVEL


GONE WITH THE WIND LAMP

Glass Magazine Rack postmodern

Zebra Striped Stool

Howard Kline - Olive you


Thomas Kinkaid Via Casino Lithograph 81/140

In the very beginning of his artistic career, Thomas Kinkade put his entire life savings into the printing of his first lithograph. Though at the time he was already an acclaimed illustrator, Thom found that he was inspired not by fame and fortune, but by the simple act of painting straight from the heart, putting on canvas the natural wonders and images that moved him most.
Throughout his life Thomas Kinkade shared his joy and used his paints in support of hospitals, schools, and humanitarian relief. Though the recipient of countless awards and honors, it was Thom’s profound sense of purpose that his art was not just an accessory, but also a ministry, that continues on as his legacy. From custom images that were sold for The Salvation Army, Hurricane Katrina relief, Rotary International, to donations that now grace the halls of St. Jude’s Children’s Research Hospital, the White House, The Vatican, and Britain’s Tate Museum, Thom raised hundreds of thousands of dollars over his lifetime for charity.
Thom’s dearest wish had always been that his artwork would be a messenger of hope and inspiration to others – a message to slow down, appreciate the little details in life, and to look for beauty in the world around us. As millions of collectors around the world sit back and enjoy his artwork in their homes, there is no doubt that Thomas Kinkade had indeed achieved his goal of Sharing the Light.


Childs Life framed Magazine cover


Contemporary Steel Console Table


OUTSIDE
CRATE AND BARREL PATIO SET

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